“You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows,” Bob Dylan sang. But these days, a guide through the seemingly endless flurry of pop culture offerings is just what we need. With that in mind, here is what’s on the radar screen in TV, music and film for the coming week. MOVIES

Big Releases on May 20: Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising; The Nice Guys

Big Picture: Seth Rogen’s career strategy is clearly based on taking roles that require him to smoke pot, and it’s taking him to high places. Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising finds beleaguered parents Mac (Seth Rogen) and Kelly Radner (Rose Byrne) joining forces with their ex-frat nemesis, Teddy (Zac Efron), to take on an even greater evil: a sorority house.

Mac and Kelly have 30 days to close on the sale of their home, but Kappa Nu has moved in next door. These girls gone wild are rebelling against sexism and conservatism, but Gloria Steinem probably wouldn’t be invited to the party. The girls’ revolutionary tactics include stripper poles, drug abuse, binge drinking and bikini-clad ambushes. Rogen meets it all head on with slapstick or squinty eyes.

Like most Tinseltown cases, their investigation uncovers a high-reaching conspiracy. The one-liners and violence are rapid-fire; the hairstyles and fashion are weapons of comic relief; Crowe’s hotheaded, abrasive rep is deftly played for laughs. For the sequel, I predict The Nice Guys vs. The Other Guys: Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg could hold their own in a buddy-cop comedy shootout.

Forecast: This sequel spells success. But the next time the Radners need to scare off a frat, they just need to get Crowe, the international champion of glaring, to house-sit for a weekend.

Honourable Mention: The Angry Birds Movie. Yes, this is based on the inexplicably addictive smart game. Instead of ignoring your family by staring at a smartphone overrun with feisty avian, you can ignore each other together by watching their antics on the silver screen. Take flight with the feathered trio of Red (Jason Sudeikis), Chuck (Josh Gad) and Bomb (Danny McBride) as they defend their island against mysterious green piggies. (Am I the only one who would have preferred Neighbors 2: Angry Birds Rising, in which imaginary animated birds take on an extremely baked Rogen?)

Preacher is less about sermons and more about eulogies, or at least punchy one-liners before sending angels, demons — and human monsters — to their graves. He’s like a grizzled Buffy — just swap the high heels with a priest’s collar. If Preacher were on The Walking Dead, the world would be zombie free in a matter of months. (The western-tinged drama moves to a new time slot on June 5.) As Preacher puts it, “Violence makes violence makes nothing much at all.” The same can be said of tweets.

Speaking of, Mark Burnett’s new reality dating show, Coupled, is basically The Bachelor with cellphones. Pretty, vapid people search for true love in the Caribbean while posting every insipid thought to Twitter and other social media. These revelations form as much of the drama as who makes out with whom in which filthy hot tub.

“You have nice arms — do you think you can curl me?” one woman asks a male suitor. And that counts as intellectual discourse.

Honourable Mention: All the Way (May 21, HBO). This Broadway-to-film adaptation of finds Bryan Cranston reprising his Tony-winning role as U.S. president Lyndon B. Johnson during his first groundbreaking year in office. (I can’t wait for Make America Great Again, the Broadway musical about Donald Trump’s first-year in office.)

Big Picture: Grande and Dylan are a study in contrasts. One is 22 and elfin; one is trollish and days away from 75. One is releasing a third studio album, the other No. 37. One has a stunning vocal range; one can only hit 2-3 notes at a growly mumble.

As her name implies, Grande is living large. From Broadway and Nickelodeon to pop princess. Unlike many of her contemporaries, she has staying power. Sure, there are still bubble-gum elements and clichéd EDM beats, but her voice is the difference maker — whether sultry ballad or club track.

Meanwhile, after his underrated 2015 Frank Sinatra cover album, the venerable Dylan again reinterprets pop standards such as Young at Heart and All or Nothing at All. For his next covers effort, I’m hoping for an all-ladies affair, with America’s rock poet covering the likes of Beyoncé’s Put a Ring on It, Katy Perry’s Teenage Dream and Britney Spears’s Oops!… I Did It Again. And maybe Grande’s Dangerous Woman.

Forecast: A pop star with real talent and versatility? Grande really is dangerous. As for Dylan, this rolling stone shows no signs of slowing down. Here’s hoping he makes it to album No. 50.

Honourable Mention: Eric Clapton (I Still Do). Another legend proves he’s still got it with a deft mix of originals and covers, including a Bob Dylan track. (Maybe they can join forces and make the pop starlet homage a duet album?)